No
yes
Your question makes no sense, the center of mass of a storm is a spacial reference point and the peak discharge of a stream is a time. When rain falls on the ground, it takes time for the rain to accumulate and flow into a stream thus there is always a lage between the time of the rainfall and the build up of flow in the stream.
i have tested the to doing charts and graphs and when stream flow is fast the turbidity raises and and when the stream flow decreases so does the turbidity
on the outside :)
A stream is a flow of rain water that is smaller than a river.
stream channel
the gulf stream flow into the Atlantic ocean and comes from the gulf of Mexico. the gulf stream is a warm ocean current by the way. p.s. I'm in 5th grade!:):)
Stream flow, or discharge, is the volume of water that moves over a designated point over a fixed period of time. - Google
Stream velocity is dependent of four things. They are, the flow type, the gradient, the channel shape, and the discharge of the stream. Streams will flow faster in narrow channels on steeper grades.
up stream
river